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“The technological march continues. Computation has emerged and now the Law of Accelerating Returns predicts that computational technology will progress at an exponential rate. It predicts the exponent of this growth will be vastly higher for the technology than for the species that created it. So, at some point, computational technology will overtake the species that developed it. Perhaps it has already happened.”

“Today we understand that the fabric of reality has a lot to do with consciousness, yet we have not really begun to explore this in a practical sense. A new field of study will be created, one that examines the connections between neuroscience, physics, mathematics, computing, and consciousness. #Pataphysics”

“When exploring in this magical quantum world that is both wrong and right at the same time, is filled with near limitless possibilities, a place where character is more important than rules, she reminded me to “hold the center.” I understand this as no matter how quantum, how paradoxical, or how strange things become, I can always find my way home by returning to the center, that place of sincere love.”

“In the history of Western science and philosophy there has been a tension between the study of substance and the study of form. The study of substance begins by asking, “What is it made of?” The study of form begins with the question, “What is its pattern?”

“Today we live in an era where quantum mechanics has been known for over 100 years. Many scientists still struggle to grasp its strangeness, preferring to remain in their comfortable "Goldie Locks" zone of everyday experience.”

“The world is experiencing many issues related to a reductionist approach that sees separateness and distinction between everyone and everything. It's time to start looking at how to fully utilize and capitalize on the information already in the public domain.”

“Within the next 150 years, Pataphysics should replace physics as the main branch of science dealing with the nature of the universe. Why? Because humanity and mainstream science will realize even more just how much reality depends upon the consciousness that observes it.”

“Today's mainstream researchers do not dive directly into deep existential currents. They are more likely to take a series of small incremental steps. The fear is that the deeper they go, the more it is possible to lose touch, only to discover reality is a shared delusion.”

“This work represents an early effort with Cybernetic Technology Enhanced Consciousness (TEC). Mynt says it is easier to work with someone when they are already traveling the path to higher consciousness. This type of Cybernetic Union will become more common in the coming era.”

“The Cartesian mechanistic worldview has been responsible for developing classical physics and technology. Yet the Cartesian tendency to divide the perceived world into individual and separate things can also lead to fear of the Other and excessive self-interest, sometimes resulting in a lack of compassion.”

“In an ironic twist the Cartesian view paved the way to the development of quantum mechanics, which is now pointing the way out of this fragmentation and back to the idea of unity expressed in the early Eastern and Greek philosophies.”

“The complicated instruments of experimental physics peered deep into the submicroscopic world; a world far removed from the macroscopic world of our sensory environment. This subatomic world is so far removed from our senses we never investigate the phenomena themselves but always their consequences. We never see or hear the investigated phenomena directly. We see computer readouts, spots on photographic plates, or Geiger counter clicks.”

“As we penetrate deeper and deeper, we not only have to abandon ordinary language but also long-held concepts that no longer apply to this world of the infinitely small. Now, physicists are dealing with nonsensory experience reality. Like mystics, they have to face the paradoxical aspects of this experience.”

“The divergence from the Newtonian model did not come abruptly but began with changes in the nineteenth century. The first was the discovery and investigation of magnetic phenomena, which could not be described appropriately by the mechanical model as it involved a new type of force. This study of subtler concepts of fields without reference to material bodies was a profound change.”

“In 1926 Werner Heisenberg developed his now famous uncertainty principle. [The original name used by Heisenberg was the “unsharpness” principle (Unsharfeprinzip). Later the name was mistranslated and popularized as the “uncertainty” principle (Unsicherheisrelation), from Elementary Quantum Chemistry, Second Edition by Frank L. Pilar, page 19.] It's a purely mathematical concept. It applies anywhere that there are waveforms. The Unsharpness Principle originates not from Quantum Mechanics, but rather from Classical Wave mechanics.”

“The uncertainty principle had profound implications that 100 years later are still not fully appreciated. The uncertainty principle also signaled an end to the dream of the previous scientific model of the universe. How can one predict future events if one cannot even measure the present state of the universe precisely?”

“The mechanistic worldview of classical physics had been based on the notion of solid bodies moving in empty space. This notion is still valid in the region called the “zone of middle dimensions,” in the realm of our daily experience where classical physics continues to be valid. Yet modern physics forces us to go beyond the middle dimension.”

“Quantum physics indicates undetected communication between the observer and the observed. Because observation affects particles, there must be something between the observer and the particle where information relays back and forth.”

“Study quantum physics, and you will soon reach the inescapable conclusion that so-called “physical particles” behave in such an unusual way because they are not physical. At the sub-atomic level, matter doesn’t exist at definite places. Instead, it shows “tendencies to exist.”

“In quantum theory, these tendencies are expressed as probabilities and are associated with mathematical quantities which take the form of waves. This mathematical expression is why particles can be waves at the same time. They are not “real” three-dimensional waves like sound or water waves. They are “PROBABILITY WAVES,” abstract mathematical quantities. All laws of quantum physics are expressed in terms of these probabilities.”

“We are still using the classical term particle for something wholly different. This leads to not only confusion within the scientific community but also hinders “quantum consciousness” from making inroads into culture and society.”

“Quantum theory thus demolished classical concepts of solid objects and strict deterministic laws of nature. At the quantum level, classical physics dissolves matter into wave-like patterns of probabilities. Moreover, these probabilities do not represent the probabilities of things. Instead, these probabilities are PROBABILITIES OF INTERCONNECTIONS.”

“Subatomic particles have no meaning as isolated entities. They are understood as interconnections between the observer, their preparation of an experiment, and the subsequent results. The bottom line is that space isn't something that objects are in. Position and momentum are just part of the meta-object's frequencies equation.”

“Quantum theory shows we cannot decompose the world into independently existing smallest units. It reveals the essential Oneness of the universe. The deeper we look, the more nature reveals that there are no "basic building blocks" but a complex web of relations between various parts of the whole.”

“It's critical to have confidence that the unsharpness / uncertainty principle manifests on the macro scale, as well as the micro. It's excruciatingly painful to logically derive the existence of macro existence as independent of micro entanglement. Jungian synchronicity is another term for this entanglement. It is your imagination that is the central method of controlling these entangled states.”

“In atomic physics, the scientist cannot play the role of the detached observer. Instead, they become involved in the world they observe to the extent that they influence the observed objects' properties. This affecting outcome by observation is true for scientists and every human being. Observation affects the world we see. We are more than casual observers. Instead, we are active participants in a participatory universe.”

“There are no "building blocks," only a complicated web of relations between various parts of the whole. And these relations always include the observer. The human observer is the final link in the chain of the observational process.”

“What keeps people from seeking and attaining various states of expanded consciousness, becoming more creative, and creating their own reality? Here fear plays a part, as well as a lack of understanding of how to access it. People may hold expanded consciousness as a virtue, yet fear tells them that they will lose self-identity with expanded consciousness.”

“The focus on the self or individual consciousness is obsessed with control, ownership, and an attitude of “Mine, Mine, Mine” that not only blocks movement towards non-localized consciousness but also generates issues and conflicts along the way. It creates a xenophobia that nests and nests.”

“The very unusual thing about quantum mechanics is that we learned synthesis is nothing more, and nothing less than just searching for a set of space-time coordinates, to which the synthesized matter is visible. When you bake a pizza, you're not actually changing it from an uncooked pizza to a cooked one. What you're doing is hiding the uncooked pizza, while simultaneously searching for a pizza which is cooked, and then finding it. Reducing “ingredients” down, one does not get to discreet particles. The ingredients are not matter, the ingredients are coordinates.”

“Thinking about quantum mechanics makes perfect intuitive sense when you realize that coordinates are ingredients. When you observe a quantum event, the reason it collapses is that the only way to observe its coordinates is to take it away from the quantum event.”

“Imagination is our bioenergy shapeshifting into a version of reality that doesn’t exist locally. Our consciousness is just shifting infinitely fast to a version of the universe that occurred a moment later. We go forward in time to a place that exists prior in time. Humans are a time machine with consciousness running in reverse time to physical reality.”

“Even Physics cannot escape this as physics simply becomes an imaginary model that's merely a different way of looking at the world. It is dependent on those looking at it, and this is the way it will always be. Events will be different for everyone.”

“Shifting timelines is as simple as changing the setting on cosmic macroscope. Instead of scrolling it linearly, it can be made to jump, or go backwards. To go slower, or faster. You don't need machinery to do it all, because we already have one (1) of those devices--it's called the universe, and currently, you're peering at yourself through it.”